A federal judge declared a mistrial Thursday in the case of a Rwandan woman on trial in New Hampshire.

Beatrice Munyenyezi, 41, was accused of lying about her role in the Rwandan genocide to obtain U.S. citizenship.

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Jurors have deadlocked twice, first on Tuesday and again Thursday after 14 hours of deliberations over several days.

Munyenyezi's attorney said she very upset that she could be facing another trial, which means more time away from her family.

"She's very tearful. She's very emotional right now," attorney David Ruoff said. "It was a mixed reaction. She was not convicted, she was not acquitted. She remains detained pending trial, so now she going to remain in detention pending her second trial, which could approach two and a half years detention before a final result on her case."

Prosecutors argued in court that Munyenyezi took part in the mass killings of Tutsis and helped decide who would be slain during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. They said she also married a prominent figure who has already been prosecuted for his role in the mass killings.

In the end, jurors failed to reach a verdict.

"They had indicated that they had been deadlocked, so the judge gave them a special instruction to get them to deliberate more. They deliberated for a full day, and at the end of the day, concluded that they could not unanimously reach a verdict," Ruoff said.

Munyenyezi's attorney said that his client was five months pregnant with twins and on bed rest, so would not have been physically able to carry out the crimes.

"The evidence it completely fabricated. The witnesses were asked to tell a story and they told a story. There was no any physical evidence to support a single thing the government said," Ruoff said.